Skip to main content

tv   Cavuto  FOX Business  January 23, 2013 8:00pm-9:00pm EST

8:00 pm
management bar. lou: i love the title, think thin. that is part of the battle. i know, it is obvious i don't think thin. i will. the product itself. how do you get to it? retailed around the country? >> it is, 25,000 doors. we're national. so, you know from health to grocery stores, all the way to drug, clubs, you can buy our food. lou: if for whatever reason, some part of the country did not have think thin, where do they get of information, thin thinkproduct.com is the place to go. lou: liz ann, thank you so much for being with us. product, think thin. and it is booming, i love success full business stories. >> thank you very much. lou: come back.
8:01 pm
>> iback thank you.>> i'm goingg thin, i promise could babe. that is it from "lou dobbs tonight," good night from new york. neil: it is cold, getting colder, environmentalists are talking crazier, in the middle of a freeze that does not look "like" global warming. the climate change crowd giving us this warning, pay up, or we ain't gonna shut up. i am neil cavuto, the good thing about climate changes, they never have to change, no matter the weather they stick to the samish to. same story. the higher normal temperatures last year in united states,
8:02 pm
climate change. hurricane sandy, climate change. a largely inactive hurricane season prior, climate change. the new england patriots not making it to the super bowl, climate change. you can believe this. just believe this, climate change. like the environmental gift that keeps giving, ever since they ditched term global warming, environmentalists have a label to pretty much fits everything. it would be funny, if they would not want to spend the money to change anything that affects the weather. now leaving asidecall ron, focus on this he has a big backer in washington. and climate change crusade that
8:03 pm
will bypass congress. this is about to get expensive. and doesn't mark know it for years he tried to tell a mainstream media, that won't listen that the widespread view climate change is man-made. and more than a thousand scientists argue it is wrong. and now that environmentalist bashing crusader, warns, spending trillions of dollars addressing that imaginary problem is more than wrong, it will be pricey, mark. i'm afraid of that post, inaugural automatic pilot we have for global addressing climbal at change climate change, is it too late? >> right now the president of united states invoking god to fight global warming. you mentioned this 14 trillion-dollar report.
8:04 pm
that report in its essence said, pay up or we'll have bad weather, this is a mob protection racket. they actually state in this world economy forum report that we can prevent storms like sandy if we pay $700 billion a year now. this -- this is amazing. for actual people who phds to come up with these reports, but they do it. they are. lying somehow acts of government and spending can somehow control our government to the climate we want. he said we could do something about floods and hurricanes and droughts, now the power of the ballot box extends to controlling the weather. neil: do you feel this speaks to
8:05 pm
urgency of doing something about this, what do you think? >> if you accept the united nations and al gore's view, doing, whatever they propose, would have no impact according to their figures. so it is an exercise in futility even if you believe it. the kyoto protocol. the grand-daddy of all climate treaties, which canada has just pulled out of. if that were fully ratified and enforced, it would not have a impact on global warming according to global warming activists figures, the same with u.s., cap and trade bill, obama saying it would have made our planet 4 to 5 degrees cooler. meanwhile epa was forced to say it would not affect the levels, the idea we could do something
8:06 pm
does nat bear out, only we forward to through technology, we're watching it with fracking, u.s. is down 2007 levels of emissions, we're on the way to 1990 levels because of technology, we are moving away from coal through technology not heavy hand of government. neil: mark thank you very much. >> follow the president and his executive orders, it looks like the white house will be by passing congress to deal with climate change. and with more than its fair amount of our change, which has our judge napolitano overheating right now. he can ill afford to do, he has lost so much already. >> do you know how i lost weight, climate change, only kidding. neil: the president is going to bypass congress to make the point? >> yes, and in a way that is lawful, unconstitutional. because the congress has given some of its authority to prior presidents but lawful because he is using authority they gave to
8:07 pm
him, the president can have the epadecide because it will cost us money to clean up -- fill in the blanks, sandy -- we can charge people for the clean up cost. it will cost us more money to clean up the atmosphere. we can make automobiles that are more fuel efficient, and tell the manufacturing companies how efficient they should be. neil: is that legal? >> yes, but unconstitutional, it is legal because congress lets the president have that power. but the act of transferring that power from congress where consititution gives to the president, where th the constitution keeps it away. this goes back to hitchard richard nixon, congress said sure, you make the riles. fast forward or wind it up 40 years later, to barack obama, and you have an epa, ennaging
8:08 pm
enacting rules that congress has rejected. and a president boasting about it in his inaugural address. that is what we have in america in 2013. neil: they don't even know what they are going to do with this money. let's say they could push that 700 billion a year, which is crazy. how do you make sure, let's say, whatever you want to do to address the problem, that might not be a real man-made problem. how do you make sure it gets in the right-hands and not just obliteratedded into the poor countries that are not necessarily well run. >> you can't, the bureaucrats that calderon, believes they can right any wrong, and regulate any behavior if you give them enough cash, they don't have an organization to do it they will try to get u.n. to praise dues. -- to raise dues, some are paid
8:09 pm
by the executive branch of the country, and not passed upon by legislative branch. neil: who would release the money. >> a global inspector general who works for left wing bureaucrats, and believes they can tame mother nature by spending cash. this is a self-reinforcement. big government belief, if you give us enough power and cash, we'll make it stop raining. that is absurd. and american public should reject it before the president signs the executive orders. neil: there are a lot of environmentalists who look at storms, and they say, get them when they are afraid. if you want to see more ignore it, if you don't, cough up. >> government has been scaring people for hundreds of years, whenever it wants their freedom, or wants their cash. when it wants to control them, and it wants cash from them, it
8:10 pm
scares them, they naturally cling to the big arms of big brother for comfort and security. it did this after 9/11. it did it during the cold war, now with environmentalism, the american public some realize, you can't spend cash to change the laws of nature. we don't regulate nature, nature confines us. neil: well put. but they argue that we're have changed nature. it is up to man to let nature take it back. >> there so little scientific evidence. the only way they can make that argument and pick and choose little segments of evidence from here and there and connection them, like on a puzzle. if you look at big picture it does not make sense we could change the rotation of the earth. or when it rains, or how the win wind blows by blows cash at it. neil: it would be good to know
8:11 pm
if you go on a nice vacation, and you pay it not to rain. >> remember patton, and he said give high a weather prayer. -- give me a weather prayer. neil: thank you into napolitano. beyonce, not really singing. a marine band not really playing. a football player with an imaginary girlfriend, and a president with a imaginary cuts, forget about getting back tory reality, what is reality. and rand shear bac here back wie rant, and the backlash he is getting for daring not to be pro forma. aww man. [ male announcer ] returns are easy with free pickup from the u.s. postal service. we'll even drop off boxes if you need them.
8:12 pm
visit usps.com pay, print, and have it picked up for free. any time of year. ♪ nice sweater. thank you. ♪ [ male announcer ] how do you turn an entrepreneur's dream... ♪ into a scooter that talks to the cloud? ♪ or turn 30-million artifacts... ♪ into a high-tech masterpiece?
8:13 pm
♪ whatever your business challenge, dell has the technology and services to help you solve it.
8:14 pm
♪ the rocket the rockets red gl. >> who knew, beyonce pulling a milli vanilli, who knew. but they were singing teeny bopper tunes, and they looked silly. but beyonce was singing america's tune. it is a continued pattern of little lies that hardly move the world but give you a false impression of the world, stars you think are singing live but are not, marine bands you think would be the last to put their stuff on taif, bu tape but do. parties that say they are going to work together but can't. forget about their words not being in s ync with there are
8:15 pm
mouths. >> would you sing or dance or do whatever the president asked if you have an opportunity for an historic moment, i'm going to sing the "star spangled banner," then you don't, now she condition say that she cheated herd out of the opportunity, and cheated americans out of that moment, everyone was so happy, it was wonderful performance but it was in brooklyn. then she pulled out the earpiece, like wow this will be harder, she is doing it live. without the earpiece, then for whatever reason. neil: you were listening to her? >> i was, and then she pulled earpiece out, why did she do that, is that a prop. >> to make you think she is really doing it live. >> but not the presidential inauguration. >> it has happened time again, when it is cold outside, if it was 10 degrees colder than it
8:16 pm
was. >> it wasn't that cold. >> we must have more important things to talk about. neil: this serves as a metaphor -- >> i don't think it does. neil: well, enjoy your last visit. what is going on with you know an inaugural week, a disconnect from reality, spending is ignored in an address. but it does not come up. deficit came up once in the speech, debt never. it is like it was like another alter universe where even the songs are faked. >> look, we talk about the bubble. it is real. and no body's bubble is bigger or thicker than the president of the united states, he is surrounded by people all of the
8:17 pm
time who tell him how billiant, and decisive he is. there is that su surealty. they can mark anywhere they -- park anywhere they want that creates a an and you real unive. neil: it will be an interesting next few weeks, where you have to mean what you say, whether you are lip-synching or not. the expectation is with the vote in the house to forestall the debt crisis by giving both sides time to get their ducks in order, you are raising expectations that something is going to get done. >> the person who was telling the truth is, now you know what
8:18 pm
i'm all about. he laid it out, he said republicans i'm not working with you, he addressed climate control. neil: he didn't say that. >> yeah he did, he made it clear, where he of the i'm going to do what i'm going to do now, and i'm president. >> i think steve forgot -- this is an inaugural address. >> it did not sound like it. >> if we sit hereafter the state of the union, and president did not discuss the debt, i will say you are right, but an inaugural address is about something else, it is not about deficits, it is about his lofty goals. >> he was in your face, this is what i'm going to do, this is what i'm going to push through, and deal with it, that was the at computer. >> that is not it -- was the attitude. >> that is not it, he never said
8:19 pm
he doesn't know there will be reforming a involved. he said the opposite, you will hear that. neil: hope springs eternal. only reason why i put that in some context, kiddingly, but to make the bigger point is, this just, disconnect to your point about a washington that is just saying one thing, doing another, liverring in a bubble. -- living in a bubble. and it is to the point now where it is all for show. a great show, i know many guys who were watching beyonce, didn't care if she got the words right or accurate. so, is that a sign of the times right now? in washington the way it is right now? >> you know, the judge, judge napolitano, would no doubt agrow with this sentiment. that is that when you give people the trappings of power and pomp, and they forget to
8:20 pm
live humbly and in connection with the people who they are to represent, and they are to serve. and when founders crafted this nation, the idea of the spectical, remember this, there was debate about whether to have a inaugural ceremony for washington at all, but they needed to do it to thumb their nose at the brits a bit. but overtime it jump acreates, and it gets into a surrealality in this lip-synced universe. >> what obama campaigned on and what he said at the inauguration are two different things, i find that rivetting, jobs and working in. i till you, that is a in your face speech. >> wait for the state of the union. >> i can't wait, i wish it was
8:21 pm
tonight, i'm so excited. neil: i think that beyonce is doing an opening act. >> are we talking about beyonce or the president? neil: i have no idea. in the meantime, i don't think that you need to read lips to know how these two feel about open other today, -- about each other today, they let their own unvarnished words do all the talking. >> if his been president at the time, and i found you did not read the cables from benghazi, i would have relieved you from your post. >> i believe in transparent see and taking responsibility, and i have done so. >> hillary clinton is not talking to us after that. but rand is. next.
8:22 pm
8:23 pm
8:24 pm
>> had i been president at the time, and i found you did not
8:25 pm
read the cables from benghazi, i would have relieved you of our post. i think it is inex use able, their lives could have been saved. had someone been more on top of the job. >> i have submitted limb laying tlegislation,to this committee . >> the problem is review board has the recommendations, but there is one thing you failed to address, that sets us up for another tragedy like this, they should never have been sent in there without a military guard, someone needs to take leadership. >> i believe in transparency, i believe in taking responsibility, and i have done so. neil: give rand a hand. a few democrats were thinking and saying as much today, because no one got hillary clinton all off her talking
8:26 pm
point so fast. he all but called state department farce. the man who took no prisoners today, welcome senator paul. how did it go down, do you think? >> you know one thing we learned today is she did not read the cables from benghazi. the pleas for help, for more security. which were unanswered, and refused by the state department. she never read them before his death. that is inexcuse i'l in. libya, is one of the most dangerous countries in world. i know she condition read the cables -- see this can't read the cables from every country, but you would think she would be right on top with cables from libya. i think we're in danger of another tragedy from libya or other war torn countries, we treat it as war. not the same as a paris embassy
8:27 pm
or a london embassy. neil: you know, i spent a good deal of time watching events today, your sharp questioning included. i thought there was a lot of rearview mirror looking, what led to these events, you tried to connect with what happened to what could happen again, raising possibility we seem to have learned little and seemed to have exposed ourselves to justice of happening again, thousands of vulnerable americans who are you know, you have to be careful how you say it, ripe for the picking. we've learned very little from this. >> i think that tripoli has more in common with bagdad than with paris. and i think the state department treats libya and tripoli like paris, instead of like bagdad. we set up a embassy in bagdad, still to this day, it is protected by a fortress, and by
8:28 pm
thousands of armed guards and marines. and that is the way i would treat libya, and several other countries that are unstable. here is the question i would have asked secretary clinton if i had a chance, when she goes to a foreign country does a militia guard her? this is such a huge error of judgment that disqualified her from making these decisions, that is why i was hard on her, if there is a time in the future, she has to make the decisions, she still has to answer these bad decisions in the past. neil: i think maybe she got a pass, maybe just the nature of the hearing set up, you know one guy, gets 5 minutes, and back and forth, republican, democrat, sometimes they are top of their questions, the other guy is not. and away we go. to me, i don't mean to be
8:29 pm
disrespectful of the system, but for nothing. >> well hopefully we got some answers, one they were not on top of security, not reading the security cables, the other point i made, original 9/11. i was a doctor in private practice in kentucky, after that i was disturbed we had a huge investigation and no one lost their job. neil: what did you think of her defense, there is a sim i a sysn place to get rid the federal workers that is the way that washington works. >> here is the system for federal employees it sim possible to get -- it is impossible to get rid of a federal employee, they are not bad people, they are good family people, i don't think that secretary clinton is a bad person, i don't think that she will ful fully did anything wro. but they made judgment errors that really should disqualify them from making the judgments
8:30 pm
again, they should not be put in a position, that including secretary clinton. she should never again be in a position to make judgment calls about security. shy made terrible errors of judgment. so did the people who were directly involved in this. neil: she has spent 17 years most reported woman i -- respecn in the world. >> i think we got side tracked about talking whether the movie caused this. neil: republicans were to blame for this by cutting funding to the embassies as if there was a quid pro quo. but they turn this on republicans or she did, i was amazed by that. >> but other thing is a couple things i brought up in the
8:31 pm
hearing, i am sure she is not aware of, her state department spent $100 thousand putting electric charging stations in vienna, and com 80 million flush down the drain, that is bad management. which goes back to judgment again. if she is not aware of where her money is being spent, it is being wasted, she has no ability toy say, i did not have enough money for this. and looking at total security in state department it went up 36% since 2007, there is no excuse, just bad management. neil: senator thank you very much. >> thank you. neil: rand paul. taking a bite out of otherwise exceptional apple numbers. if only lawmakers were held to such very high standards.
8:32 pm
>> announcer: you never know when, but thieves can steal your identity and turn your life upside down. >> hi. >> hi. you know, i can save you 15% today if you open up a charge card account with us. >> you just read my mind. >> announcer: just one little piece of information and they can open bogus accounts, stealing your credit, your money and ruining your reputation. that's why you need lifelock to relentlessly protect what matters most... [beeping...] helping stop crooks before your identity is attacked. and now you can have the most comprehensive identity theft protection available today... lifelock ultimate. so for protection you just can't get anywhere else, get lifelock ultimate. >> i didn't know how serious identity theft was until i lost my credit and eventually i lost my home. >> announcer: credit monitoring is not enough, because it tells
8:33 pm
you after the fact, sometimes as much as 30 days later. with lifelock, as soon as our network spots a threat to your identity, you'll get a proactive risk alert, protecting you before you become a victim. >> identity theft was a huge, huge problem for me and it's gone away because of lifelock. >> announcer: while no one can stop all identity theft, if criminals do steal your information, lifelock will help fix it, with our $1 million service guarantee. don't wait until you become the next victim. you have so much to protect and nothing to lose when you call lifelock now to get two full months of identity theft protection risk free. that's right, 60 days risk-free. use promo code: gethelp. if you're not completely satisfied, notify lifelock and you won't pay a cent. order now and also get this shredder to keep your documents out of the wrong hands-- a $29 dollar value, free. get protected now. call the number on your screen or go to lifelock.com to try lifelock protection risk free for a full 60 days. use promo code: gethelp.
8:34 pm
plus get this document shredder free-- but only if you act right now. call the number on your screen now! neil: 54 billion-dollars in sales, in 3 months. that is disappointing? apple stock crushed in initial after-hours trading, after posting the sales numbers, you know how that goes on wall street. compare to about what media calls good news, home prices rising in november, but they are still down 15% from peak. sandra smith, a tech expert, on
8:35 pm
the double standard. it does seem weird to me. the way you treat the stock or investors do. based on this. >> i agree, i think that people are beating up these guys an after amazing run. neil: maybe they are getting back to reality. >> 10% is a lot. you know also. neil: and after hour fall. >> yes. their cash position is $126 billion they are trading about 3 x cash, that not crazy, they have redefined world
8:36 pm
8:37 pm
8:38 pm
. neil: looking at advance product from original product, the new big thing might becoming out, but i do know hear it. >> it is tv. we have to recognize with apple.
8:39 pm
i'm not talking apple tv, but i'm talking about apple tv's version 4. neil: for are for god's sake. >> the same thing -- >> tv news jobs, outside of that. >> there is a point in time, when you are going to watch everything. on internet-ready phone, apple tv is just a step in this direct, apple kills categories, they kill music. neil: i don't think they are killing any more, i think they are maiming some. >> they sell fond fundamental phenomenal products, there is a time you have to look at stock, and say it is expensive, they will have to do a lot to demand a 700-dollar sales price, this is a stock where market determines the price, right now, they will have to work harder for it.
8:40 pm
it. it. >> here is the thing, you can't argue with the fact that a big company will reach its peak at some point, the question, is it now? it not now for them. neil: you are optimistic, you see the stock going higher. >> if you look price to forward earnings, this is a very expensive stock, these earnings today do not render the price today. neil: all right, don't sell it short. everyone is going crazy over the president this week, but what if i told you a lot of this was at facade? i'm not saying a beyonce lip-synching facade. but just this woodstock love in at the capitol did not reflect reality in the country. while folks were whooping it up. it turns out americans were thinking more like the days this
8:41 pm
guy was running the country.
8:42 pm
stay top of mind with customers? from deals that bring them in with an offer... to social media promotions that turn fans into customers... to events that engage and create buzz... to e-mails that keep loyal customers coming back, our easy-to-use tools will keep you in front of your customers. see what's right for you at constantcontact.com/try.
8:43 pm
neil: well you know, dow hitting a 5 year high, we're getting close to the all-time high, investors not only ones celebrating. hundreds rallying at president's inauguration this week, why in a lot of surveys are so many others, not in washington, feeling so down? this one struck me as most reveals, a gallup poll showing 39% of americans feel good about this country. that is the lowest rate since carter administration. you would think that happy days are here again. what is the deal? dr. robi ludwig joining us, and
8:44 pm
steven lee, what is going on? >> i think it is connected to the economy. >> the economy is getting better. >> listen, a lot of people are out of jobs. people feel insecure, we connection our identity with how well we're doing financially. if they are not meeting their goal, they can't own that house, they can't secure a job, their annual salary is not going up, they don't know how they are going to pay for their kids college, how can you feel good about themselves, people people there is no safety net any more. neil: there was a disconnect with those crowds in washington, whooping up and hollering at speech, a good speech. >> i don't agree with you there. neil: with trumpets after. it makes it good. but he did not address the issues that seemed to be most on the minds of folks like jobs,
8:45 pm
debt, and deficit. >> you are so right, i was furious when i hear the speech. i'm not kidding, median incomes in the country. neil: you should call her doctor. >> i'm sorry doctor. i can't call someone dr. rori that looks like my daughter, incomes have fallen 10%, that is unheard of. yet, the people, that are really being harmed by that, that is probably the largest fall in median incomes purchasing power, the people that are suffering are those that buy gasoline, and food. those prices -- >> in the market, why don't you see it in not all but most retail -- is there something that is not jiving with what we're told? >> i don't know if we're being told the truth.
8:46 pm
people are living their own reality, it is very difficult out there. neil: this is the first generation that is not optimistic that the following generation is doing well. >> think about the kids coming out of college, they are having a hard time getting jobs, they don't have confidence to know whether they will do as well as their parents before them. neil: they live with their parents. >> they live with their parents, they don't leave. that is why their parents are depressed. this is why there is a feeling of hopelessness, we don't have faith in government. >> this is the what got me, i don't think that this country has been as fractured as it is today, since the civil war. that is true. african-american women, 95%, for one candidate. white men, the elect had been held by white men voted romney would have carried 47 states that is fractured.
8:47 pm
you hear this inauguration speech talking about liberal buzzwords. i'm a registered democrat, take it from me, when i hear climate change in context of median income down 10%, i turn it off, i want to hear how are we going to fix this economy. you know you heard debates between romney, and obama, i will give anybody 10-dollars for every time they heard the wore growth. -- word growth, we're stuck with this pie, and how to distribute the pie. neil: that is what bums people out? they are not optimistic. >> they are responding to fact that we have something who may be gives good speeches but how can you lead? what are you doing? some are a little bit more hor full than others. but the bottom line, is you live your life every day, if you don't feel good within that life, you will feel more depressed and less hopeful. >> and the irony is the guy you
8:48 pm
are voting for is the guy that is leading you down this horrible path. where your median incomes are falling. how are you supposed to feel good if your father is a terrible father, that is a bottom line. neil: and highers a woman with -- higher higher hires a womane name that lip-synchs. >>. what happens with giving the poor guy the break. >> maybe that is what depressed everybody, beyond lip-synching. lip-synching. neil: kelly clarkson was there. >> she is already star, pick someone that could become a star, if you really -- >> i like that idea. >> i'll get on that. when we come back, leave the gun, take the caknolly and more government money, how "the godfather" is proving that the
8:49 pm
more washington spends the more it waits. the boys use capital one venture miles for their annual football trip. that's double miles you can actually use. tragically, their ddy got sacked by blackouts. but it's our tradition! that's roughing the card holder. but with the capital one venture card you get double miles you can actually use. [ cheering ] any flight, anytime. the scoreboard doesn't lie. what's in your wallet? hut! i have me on my fantasy team. [ male announcer ] how do you make 70,000 trades a second... ♪ reach one customer at a time? ♪ or help doctors turn billions of bytes
8:50 pm
of shared information... ♪ into a fifth anniversary of remission? ♪ whatever your business challenge, dell has the technology and services to help you solve it.
8:51 pm
8:52 pm
neil: "the godfather" getting an offer he could not refuse, free government money, the mafia in italy, is now infiltrating the green energy business, pumping out billions in subsidies so the mob carbs in. remind -- cashing in reminds you what happened in washington, you remember solyndra, with dead folks getting homebuyer tax credits. chris, what do you make of this? >> this is something we're familiar with in the united states. medicare for example, we've seen a lot of prosecutions over the
8:53 pm
years of organized crime folk involved in ahead care scam, -- medicare scam, fake claims, that is long-standing it has happened with welfare benefits and other things, one other thing that always makes it more complicated, when you have programs that are administered by bureaucrats and conceived by politicians, those are individuals that can be i think term is gotten to. might be induced to look the other direction, and organized crime does love government programs. neil: the bigger the sums for the program the more ripe they are for this sort of thing? >> you know, in the old country where the cavuto regime is, your family. >> that is lovely. >> not cool. >> look. hey, you know, score one for the mafia, zero for the government, they out smarted government for a while.
8:54 pm
>> i like how they have veered from liquor to this. >> to wind farms, but they are going to be targets. neil: how about someone else's wind farm. >> they got the guns. >> you are a fan of green energy, this is the best news ever, have you known the mob to get in a business that did not make a lot of money. >> i don't think that is what it is. >> they see the money. >> wasted money, the government just throws money out there and they will grab it they are smart enough. >> we're talking about italy, right? >> well, you should know, mob has lost much of its influence in had country, it has much influence in the mother country. >> i have nothing to say on that. neil: chris, i guess now, looking at what is going on, abroad, you know they are
8:55 pm
kicking around in europe this transaction tax on stock trades, a lot of countries are going along. this is not a far cry from a europe that is seizing on still more way its take advantage of more government. >> well, here is the thing, that is what we find over. the problem with any government program, ends up being in the administration, it sounds good when you are sitting in a conference room. but but you get to implementation that is where troubles begin, and often times politicians misjudge human nature, that leads to undesirable results. neil: where is this going? we know a lot more initiatives are coming. the president committed enough to address the climate change, he made it a front and center topic in his inauguration dress even if he -- inaugural address
8:56 pm
even if he bypasses the congress. >> they are taking advantage of money, they are grabbing it, and wasting it, this is an area we've not been before, it is easier to steal the money than to waste it. neil: but you, as a spend thrift liberal don't care. >> let's be serious, when you talk about government programs you know about is some waste, and fraud. >> you know there will be some fraud that is negative. >> but true. neil: the bigger the numbers the bigger the fraud. >> it happens in private business too, you have to do everything possible to weed that out, and go after everything like this they made big, big, big gains in terms of medicare fraud, but you don't want to throw out important programs just because this say problem. go after the problem. >> when does it work that
8:57 pm
government makes a business work. >> they never make a be work. >> but that is what they are doing the wind farms. neil: obama administration came into power like at what china is doing, you know lithium batteries and the like, and indians are doing, we better, be as committed to this if not they will dominate strays that will be at the vortex of everything we're doing, we have to get onboard, what of that argument. >> the problem is that ais so gosh darn weird, we have strange point of origin. we have an unusual mixture of cultures. and those countries, those other places, that was an effort to try to induce a capitalistic society or innovation. neil: you lif left out -- >> you call america strange
8:58 pm
people we are not. >>i love the strangeness. the president talked about that in his address, and things we have done overtime. i'm pro strange. i am pro strange. >> this is getting strangier. neil: a lot of thieves take advantage of this, if not mob, you worry it gets worse here? >> all i know is that i know that cavuto rescreen, regime i. >> i am not touching, that you threw he off once. >> they can take a business. neil: we're in deep with different government now. >> we'll see more, will the president get a lot of that agenda by, by passing congress. >> no, he can move money but he hope toss use the ea epa to impe
8:59 pm
caps to clampdown on carbon emissions that it is financially up possible and price carbon out of the market. >> do we have any green energy success stories. neil: no, they just disappear.

102 Views

info Stream Only

Uploaded by TV Archive on